24 Or. 366 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
These are criminal actions brought by the state game warden in the justice’s court for the South Portland Precinct, wherein the defendants, after trial, were severally convicted and fined. Thereafter each of the defendants prosecuted his appeal to the circuit court, where the cases were tried anew with like results, and from the judgments therein rendered the defendants ' have appealed to this court. The questions involved in each case being substantially the same, they were, as a matter of convenience, tried together in the circuit court, and the same course has been adopted in the argument here.
In State v. Wm. McGuire, the complaint charges that the defendant, “On the sixth day of March, A. D. 1893, in the county of Multnomah, and state of Oregon, did wil
In State v. F. C. Barnes the complaint is the same, except that it charges that the defendant did “wilfully and unlawfully have in his possession and offer for sale,” etc. The testimony for the state showed that at the time mentioned in the complaint, which was the close season on the Columbia River, the defendant was the proprietor of a fish market in the city of Portland, and had exposed for sale steelhead salmon which had been caught in the Columbia River. The defendant offered to show that such fish had been caught in the open season on said river, and had been preserved in cold storage from that time until they were offered for sale. This evidence was excluded on the same ground and an exception reserved.
In State v. Covach the complaint is the same as State
The instruction of the court to the jury, to which an exception was reserved, is the same in each case, and is as follows: “ If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants, or either of them, had steelhead salmon, chi-nook salmon, silver salmon, or blueback, in their possession, or offered the same for sale, during the close season on the Columbia River, no matter where the same were caught or taken, or when they were caught or taken, then you must find the defendants guilty.” The complaints are based on the act of 1891, entitled “An act to protect salmon in the state of Oregon,” etc., and the act of 1893, amendatory thereof. Section 1 of the act of 1891 provides that “ It shall not be lawful to take or fish for salmon in the Columbia River or its tributaries, by any means whatever, in any year hereafter between the first day of March and the tenth day of April, or between the tenth day of August and the tenth day of September, in any of the rivers and bays of the state, or the Columbia River, during the weekly close time, — that is to say, between the hours of six o’clock P. M. on each and every Saturday and six o’clock in the afternoon of the following Sunday”: (Session Laws, 1891, p. 33). By the amendatory act of 1893, sections 3 and 6 of the act of 1891 are amended so as to read as follows: “ Section 3. It shall not be lawful for any person or persons to take or fish for salmon in the waters of the Nehalem, Tillamook, Nestucca, Salmon, Siletz, Yaquina, Alsea, Siuslaw, Umpqua,
The object of these actions is to obtain a construction of the act of the legislature of 1891 as amended by the act of 1893. Under the statutes there are several close seasons, but none of them are of general application throughout the state, except the weekly close season. There are times during the year when it is an open season on the Nehalem, Tillamook, etc., and lawful to catch fish in their waters, and it is a close season on the Columbia, and unlawful to catch fish in its waters. The particular question to be determined is, Does the statute prohibit a person from having in his possession, or offering for sale, during the close seasons named in the act, any fish of the varieties mentioned, which were caught in any of the rivers enumerated during their open seasons? The construction which the trial court gave to the statute by its rulings on the evidence, and its instruction to the jury, was that it is unlawful for a person to have in his possession, or offer for sale, during the close season on the Columbia, fish of the kind named in the act, “no matter whore they were caught
This construction, however, counsel for the state insist must be given to the statute, to make it effective, and carry out the purpose of the law. Their contention is that the object of the statute is to protect such fish during the
In Magner v. People, 97 Ill. 320, among other things, Schomteld, J., says: “We think it is obvious that the prohibition of all possession and sales of such wild fowls or birds during tbe prohibited seasons would tend to their protection, in excluding the opportunity for the evasion of such law by clandestinely taking them, when secretly killed or captured here, beyond tbe state, and afterwards bringing them into the state for sale, or by other subterfuges and evasions. It is quite true that the mere act of allowing a quail netted in Kansas to be sold here does not injure, or in anywise affect, the game here; but a law which renders all sales and all possession unlawful will more certainly prevent any possession or any sale of the game within state than will a law allowing possession or sales here of the game taken in other states. This is but one among many instances to be found in the law where acts which in and of themselves alone are harmless enough, are condemned because of the facility they otherwise offer for a cover or disguise for the doing of that which is harmful.” See also State v. Randolph, 1 Mo. App. 15; Game Association v. Durham, 51 N. Y. Sup. Ct. 306; Whitehead v. Smithers, 21 Moak’s Eng. Rep. 458.
It is also held that such statutes are not in conflict with the constitutional provision that no person shall be deprived of his property without due process of law, and are not regarded as an interference with interstate commerce: Phelps v. Racey, 60 N. Y. 10; State v. Randolph, 1 Mo. App. 15. But there are other decisions, later in
In Commonwealth v. Wilkinson, 139 Pa. St. 304 (21 Atl. 14), in construing an act which provides that “No person shall kill, or expose for sale, or have in his possession after the same has been killed, any quail between the fifteenth day of December, in any year, and the first day of November following,” Paxon, C. J. said: “The manifest object of this act was the preservation of game within this commonwealth. We cannot assume that it was intended to preserve game elsewhere, and it would be a forced construction to hold that it was intended to exclude from our markets quail and other game killed in other states, where by the laws of those states the killing of them was lawful. * * * The law was not intended to have any extra territorial effect, and, if it was, it would be nugatory. * * * The construction claimed for the act by the commonwealth would render any one a criminal who lawfully killed quail in another state, and brought them here for his own use. It would be prima facie evidence of a
In these cases the courts held that the object of the act was to protect game in the state, as indicated by the title, and that the statute sought to attain this object by punishing the taking or killing of such game in the state during the prohibited seasons, or the offering for sale, or having in possession, in the state, during such times, of game so taken or killed. So that if the killing or taking of game-in the state was at a time when it was lawful, under the statute, to do so, the offering for sale, or having in possession, of game so taken or killed, was not an offense against the statute. If our statute will bear this construction,, then it was only intended to prevent the taking or catching of the salmon specified, on the rivers enumerated,, within the state, during their close seasons, and to render unlawful, or make a misdemeanor, the offering for sale, or having possession of, salmon so taken or caught, on such rivers in this state, during such close seasons. In this view, the offering for sale, or having possession of, salmon during the close seasons, which had been lawfully taken or caught, is not an offense. The trial court, however, construed the act differently, holding, as indicated by its-instruction, that the offering for sale, or having possession of, the fish mentioned in the complaint, during the close-seasons named in the act, was a misdemeanor “ no matter where the same were caught or taken, or when they were caught or taken.” So, also, the ruling of the court that
' Salmon fish is an article of food, and the law interdicting the catching of them at certain seasons is not because they are unfit for use, or unwholesome, but to protect and preserve such fish in this state. The constitution requires the object of every act to be expressed in its title. The object of the act, as expressed by the title, is to protect salmon in the state of Oregon. All its provisions are directed to this purpose. None of them would be violated by bringing fish which had been lawfully caught in other states into this state. Is it violated by offering for sale or having in possession fish during the prohibited seasons which had been caught in the open seasons on the river, when it was lawful to do so? Certainly, if the legislature intended to declare the mere possession of such fish during the close season an offense, no matter where or how lawfully caught or taken, words could easily have been found to express such intention. The section on which the
The rule is well established that “ where the language